The Daily Worker Newspaper, October 11, 1933, Page 4

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Paze Four DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 11, 1933 Over 40,000 Took Part in Los Angeles Jobless Place Deman between forty and fifty thousand we Hunger March ds for Immediate Aid Before Board of Supervisors 4 LOS ANGELES, Calif., Oct. 10—Various reports from working class or- ganizations assigned to cover the hunger march last Monday, estimated at the Plaza Six columns marched from central points of the city to the Plaza, in the face of an enlarged armed police force. About three hundred started f yas! gton and Theé - ~— oyle s Y ; : i worker: ad of being ad- March. From id Temple singe flan Seanad th B 7 demand, that of| ee ceiumn - ay ion of all unpaid, | ie : ‘ pervisors said that | each swun ers of Los A marched order to ly and , romplied worker, for his and hit ers proteste of fifteen 1 at the plaza of the demands Front he iction the thir quickly as am Hynes of 1 one of the w of nof a goc ord S for ors stated t n dem: is, they did not tion or la died of medic: attention. of | farbage Burners Starved and Kept in Leaky Barracks who work here burnin > garba make $3.50 maximum for a minimum of 12 hours a Sometimes they | work up to 20 hours a day, for the same $3.50, no overtime pay. The work is not steady. The bo& send hem to work only m they have debts in the store or in the house. Food p are sky-high. There is only one store thi which belong: to the boss. Try and figure out—lar ‘ause of starva-| contractor is some big shot city poli- | tician. costs 30 cents a pound there, stale ad 12 cents a loaf, meat costs 37| cents a pound minimum, and it’s rot-| ten at that. Besides, they live in| barracks which Iso belong to the bo: Rent is a week. On rainy da he n comes in. There are} no window panes. The roofs are like | strainers, full of holes. To keep the men divided, the boss | plays a tri He gives some men| r e he charges | men. These | nd Parkway, e sure the pint to the o! are at 19 the way, By we 3 His name is Tony Mango, AN N. R. A. SYSTEM (By a Worker Correspondent) representin hio—Here is how # membe mands were presented to the Board of Supervisors ing own- 2 o'clock S was el hich was sent of Supervisors. Oy Workers we: order to show thei their fellow worke: At ttee 40 of om the w 5 Duluth. There she might|Where many The workers waited about the ain for Plaza for the return of the commit-|to hold for winter. The same is done been cut tee. At around 4 o'clock the committee} Now this ing.” whereby e| tetummed from the board of ohne be two tetha’ w|#ie visors, and Lawrence Ross, in the name of the Commun: nave the report mand of $4 per minimum of 10 da two additional d pendent every thirty da Visors stated that the: the finances to perr this. * Workers booed this statement. hour work da & Ros stated that if the relief money were e bulk freighters , Ore, coal, grain, These owners would load a boat h coal at a Lake Erie port, boat makes ju and then lays off the crew, 1 be a job at the Walter B. Stevens & Son Co., 33 Warren St ‘or collars and h they to F ness A jolly comrade in the composi week from reading the menus. 2 Yriting ’em, doggone it. To make vinna mon pears, boil halved Of 2-3 water to 1-3 sugar and a t ‘shaped penny candies. The pea may be peeled or not, as you like Apples, too, pared, cored, and cut into sections, may be prepared in the same Way, to serve with pork. The kids will get a big “kick” out Gf them. If the cinnamon candies }, are not available in your locality, use Plain stick or powd cinnamon: Prepare gelatine d inner, at breakfast time. To make celery sou of cleaned, chopped ci ~small sliced onion. Whe 5 Slice a raw peeled po’ y into it, Season well with salt, pepper, and butter. When celery is soft, add milk tO make enough soup. Ii may be -thickened with flour if desired; and some chopped parslcy improves it a it. For salad use pineapple obttage cheese, dressing, and lettuce. . ‘ablespoon of tho: By HELEN LUKE ing reom says he gains 5 pounds per I wish I could gain half that much from | and cored pears in a syrup made se little red cinnamon pill- Unless you want to count German potato pancakes, which we'll be hay- | Iny one of these days (I-hope.) And those will be a pipe, after all your experience, | Some custards for breakfast (to- morrow) may be baked while the oven is hot, either before or after the other dishes. Recipe by Bonita; to each egg lightly beaten, add gradually 114 blesp aple sugar (or granu- d white) and 2-3 cup very warm (not boiling) milk. Salt and sprinkle with nutmeg. (If you like nutmeg— H. L.) Pour into custard cups set in pan of hot water. Fill cups to top, stir down foam, put into low aven, and increase heat. Watch carefully; test with knife. When knife comes out clean, remove. (Note. Cup custards need 325 F. about 40-45 minutes, If cooked too fast or too Jong, it will separate and be “watery.”) And now may I serve Today's Most Pungent Slice of Boloney Get enough lamb shanks for your * family, wash, and put in roaster. Put} in several carrots, scraped and halved, | with a whole clove stuck in each| half; also several small peeled onions, | and a stick of celery or some leaves e _, faved from lunchtime. | ies fig veda in the N. 6, Am- p= Add a bayleat or two if you have| nt Brisbane: : ~60me. Pour in a cup or more of} “Human beings have discovered & Water, cover, and roast. Have oven| that you can’t change the nature of \ hot for first 15 minutes (about 500 F.)|™an suddenly and violently or force H » then reduce (350 F.) Skim off fat| him by law to establish a new habit | it there's too much; add water as|0r submit to the rule of minority, ~ ©'necessary. Uncover to brown. however sincere.” Later, in the same ¥ column: “This is a big country for ‘The potatoes may bake at the same time. They need to be peeled; then butter a baking dish or pan. Cover ‘Whe bottom with a layer of potatoes, Sliced thin. Sprinkle on it salt, pep- i » bits of butter, and a light si: of flour. Repeat layers until toes are all used. Butter top rather generously. Pour in milk un- Hl potatoes are nearly covered, put f lid, and bake until they are soft. hey take a lot of time, so prepare m as soon as the meat is in oven. } Uncover pan to brown them. TODAY'S MENU Breakfast Cinnamon pears ‘Buckwheat cakes, bacon, syrup Milk Lunch Cream of Celery Soup Poppy-seed rolls Pineapple and Cheese Salad Tea or Ginger Ale ‘4 Dinner _ Roast Lamb Shank with Cstrots Ne Escalloped Potatoes Fresh Sliced Tomatoes Coffee ‘Lime Gelatin with Spiced Snaps ‘The beginners should cheer up. We oid been through all the standard ‘ of doing potatoes except plain baked, French fried, and au gratin. a dictator to handle. Stalin does it in Russia, twice as big as the United States, but Russians have always been governed by somebody, and are used to it.” How nice. Mr. Brisbane writes not only about mankind; he writes about Russians too, And now if you can stand another slice, here it is, and from the same column. “More than ten gnillions of men have been idle inthe United States for some years, and a great majority of them are still idle. Wouldn't. it be well to give them SOME KIND OF A DOLLAR and some kind of a job, without insisting on gold or plat- inum? A paper dollar would suit them nicely.” With which to buy sawdust break- fast food, no doubt. And how I love the sweet bourgeois trick of enumer- ating the unemployed as “over ten” million. It tempts one to assert pos- itively that there are “over six” Reds among ‘em, strange as it may seem. To get back to more nutritious subjects. I want to ask the N. Y. ©. comrade who sent that nice recipe for chocolate cake with chocolate icing to drop us a postzard and specify whether the latter takes two big spoons or little spoons each of but- ter and milk, ' ‘ ¥ WORKERS’ MAILBAG vessel own-|N. R. A. the wages are $16! | then | the - clerks eed up to the head of the Lakes, |hours at the alo or Erie, Pa.,|80 hours a week the time has now | led the N. R. A. or|their working days they have be- NG AGAIN system.|come the slaves of the arbitrary wills NEW YORK.—Last week I applied |two hours in. the which makes |hours before supper. They said|day he may be called upon late in vant a cutter and they wanted |the evening, e me. I said what is the|hours may be totally different. THE HioM 7 wages. Sixteen dollars a week! I |said I can’t pay rent and gas and} the feed four children on that. For $12 years I made $41.25 a wee! ked here on the|and now with the New Deal and the THE OLD ARMY GAME By a Worker Correspondent NEW YORK CITY.—At Bohack’s gained a reduction in| xpense of their wages. worked for 65, 75 and to 48 hours. Many who were working for $16, $17 or $18 per week were immediately lowered to In respect to the irregularity of | of their individual. store managers. A clerk (Reeves) may be working morning and be| me to work a few If it is Satur- sent for at his ho. But the next days his You Make Yourself? Here are very nice aprons for the mother and little daughter who go for cooking in a big way. Little daughter has a cat-pocket to keep the straying “hankie” from getting lost; mother has a ruffle to help eatch the “spills.” Can "Em ers | | Char! i . Th 25) DISTRICT No. & t NEW YORK, N. Y.—An effffective te Rane 50 See. 5, Unit Poe sie means of rallying workers to the sup- | 5° krisses Sec. 5 ¥ port of the DAILY WORKER $40,000 | 3. Janedes 5 | Sec. 4 2.50 drive is by means of challenging. = cod Sec. 1 4.26 Many organizations and individual | 4. Pito Tah workers have issued challenges to| 7 Gense ee ee each other and have found it stimu-|c. oOitriou es Social, bo = lating in their work. J. Calives perior z C. Dutris Gilbert Work. | Unit 17-14 of Detroit, Michigan, ca Lorigas Bod oe 1.22 writes that “with this note you will | Powers CAiSahA te my find enclosed a challenge which we | 20 Pet OM eomentenen? ae like to see printed in the earliest pos- | Rich. unit M. Kitola 125) | sible.edition of the DAILY WORKER. | A. Lynn, Unit 308 2.00 Me piety = “My unit has taken the $40,000 drive | Total to date ‘18.44 a Oliver “2 very seriously and is working at it} DIST! lo. Macky : with full energy. The section has | ¥),>. Kimball, Sete { set our quota at $10. 3 24. to i “We have already overfulfilled this | Tigo ,Gat,,, 7558] Total to date rae by sending in $11 which was printed | Tr. M. Zappa, Spen- | A. Scheering -50) ‘Nitrite Put Into Government Meat to Improve Appearance (By a Worker Correspondent) jact in small quantities, under the SIOUX CITY, Ia.—In your issue of} speed-up system mistakes are fre- | Sept you print a letter from an| quently made, too much nitrate is | Omahe tr bing the| used, or it is not properly mixed with |manner in which what we call the| the salt or the brine. Meat so treated meat from the “government pigs” is| is unpalatable, not to say unwhole- | | being handled. He is correct in what| come, causing a sick stomach, as the he says about the suring process.| writer knows from his own experience But he either omitted or forgot to| and what he has heard from others. mention that a stuff called “nitrite,”} The cooking process usually removes a salt of nitrous acid, is mixed in} most of the danger, but not all of it | with the salt and in the brine which] where an exces3 of nitrite is used. | is pumped into the meat before being The pig killing is about over with| salted. This nitrite is not ne ary| here just now, and the meat that} in curing the meat, but it makes it'| has been some time in salt is being | look well. While most of the packers| cut up into squares of about six t there are some who do not... | pounds average, wrapped in paper and sent to cold storage for future) use. | i hough the use of this stuff-is per-| missible under the food and drug St. Louis Paper Box Workers Looking to Ice Plant Workers Do 12. Hours Labor for Eight Hour’s Pay By a Worker Correspondent ST. LOUIS, Mo.—The Robert Gay- lord Box factory here uses many young workers 17 and 18 years old. They make heavy duty boxes out of paper, using a machine called a stitcher. A worker on this machine that can stitch a thousand boxes an hour gets paid 30 cents an hour. A young worker 18 years old is on one of these machines and taking it easy he can do his task, but the boss- Worker Cortespondent By NEW ORLEANS, La.—The con- 2781 a ditions at the Welburn Ice Co., s Street, are this way had a clerk on the platform and a box man, and they had two’ ice tankmen, and one was doing two jobs puling ice and storing it and also selling it on the platform, | and when the code came in they} put only one man to work. They} es use the speed-up system on them. fired. the clerk, put the day tank-| The owner of the plant looks over man in his place, doing boxing at| the work and tells the worker for same time. They took the| cay oe oe boxes he turns out Ea BT ~ «..| he gets a bonus. oxman and put him pulling ice nd_ storing ~it away—that is the| Well the worker storie and gets 3, ner fi seven | out an extra thousands or two eS day boxman that is on from s a day, and the bosses give him 15c to three,in the morning. for 500 and keep 15¢ for the other hen Hey ek eee Mthia Graken has started a com comes on at three to eleven and | pany union charging the workers $10! pulls ice, stores it away and also} for joining, at 10 weeks 2 Day sells it, and the third watch from | their initiation fee. Most of the tre 7 ak morning, there is | Younger workers in this shop are t : i var he TUUL for lead-' no one pulling ice on that watch. | OoKns towards the All they do is freeze down on this watch, and they one replaced one man in the engine room to offset the man that was doing clerk duty. who working men worse by their speed- up system, making them do 12 hours work in eight hours for the same pay. What they have been doing is to make the conditicus of the Detroit Dik Passes Own Quota; Challenges Others in the “Daily” of Sept. 25. The unit 1.00 unanimously decided last night to raise this amount to $25 or more. To fulfill this we are arranging the second house party in the near fu- ture.” cer, W. Va. C.P., Joplin, Mo. 6.00 Total to date 33.10 DISTRICT No. 13 Group Oakland ‘Workers J. Ginsburg, L.A. Anti-Religious Total to date 105.36 DISTRICT No. 6 M, G., Columbus 1.00 Total to date DISTRICT No. 7 3.50 180.03 1.00 The challenge reads as follows: | K.M. Laundaetl 10.00] Meet, L.A. 17.74 “Uni istri |. | Pol. Chamber ‘Unit 14, Section 7, District 7, chal. ‘Tabor 6.66! Total to date 110.82 lenges all units of Detroit and Section | south slay Club, DISTRICT No. 14 7 particularly by pledging with full| petroit 5.00 Pp. S. U., Eliz. 3.00 force to raise its Daily Worker $40,000 | Scand. Workers F. 8. U., Stelton 5.00 drive quota from $10 to $25 or more, | ,lub, 4 names 2.00) imp. Val: LD. 8.00 Jewish Women's Frei, Ges. Fer, 14.75 The unit has already overfulfilled its Jack London Cl. 8.00 Council, List 29582— Pattern 1543—sizes small, med- ium and large. Small size takes 1 3-4 yards 36 inch fabric, 5 3-4 yards binding. Pattern 1545.— sizes small, medium and large. Small size takes 1 yard 36 inch fabric. Illustrated — step-by-step sewing instructions included with each pattern. Each of these models is 15¢ (30c for both). Send coins or stamps (coins preferred). Please write very plainly your NAME, AD- DRESS, STYLE NUMBER and SIZE and pattern ordered. Address orders to Daily » Worker Pattern Department, 243 West 17th Street, New York City. Patterns by mail only, 1.05! every weapon to break the strike. Granite Center of Maine Is Ripe for Organization (By a Worker Correspondent) PORTLAND, Me.—Rockland is the center of the granite cutting industry of Maine, and also has a large sur- rounding farm section, as well as be- ing important in the lime kiln in- dustry, It also has cement mills. There is a C. P. unit there, and a strong h of the “Binn'sn Fed-| eration,” which is under Commu- | nist lead. | aip. The only really important farming district of Maine is the potato section of Probstock County, in the extreme southern end of the state, 500 miles from Portland. ‘This spot is the levyzest producer of potatoes in the Urited States. | IT understand that conditions have | een terrible there for years, and that it would be ripe for organization. But not to my kyowledge has any contact been made there, by the Party or by any of the “mass or- ganizations.” As for Portland, we have a small unit, which has done some work in the unemployed Council and jn the so-called “relief work” racket. The population here is 170,000. There has been a spontaneous movement for better wages among the 500 workers on “Federal Gov- ernment” relief work at the Forts in Portland Harbor, to which we are trying hard to give leadership. Churches Fight Brockton Strike By a Shoe Worker Correspondent BROCKTON, Mass.—Received a re- quest several weeks ago to report on conditions. I was at that time in Maine. I have travelled over 5,700 miles since then, carrying my family with me. No work anywhere at the Shoe trades. Was in Milwaukee when the leath- er workers Went out. Arrived here in Brockton on September 14. Observed conditions for a week. Eventually managed to force an increase in pick- ets, also gave program of relief, and through rank and file assistance forced the acceptance of relief plan. Several of rank and file seek to force the officials to real action, but lack leadership. I shall try to do all I can to get action. Iam now building a group to strengthen rank and file ideology in | the mass, These workers are not very class conscious due to a “boss” eom- plex. The churches here are using THE N.R.A. IN CHARLESTON By a Worker Correspondent CHARLESTON, W. Va,—The cost of living is increasing by leaps and bounds, while wages remain where they always were—at a semi-starva-~ tion level. The merchants are using the Blue Buzzard as an alibi for increasing prices. When it somes to increasing wages in proportion tothe increase in the cost of living, it is not being done, and no one can nfid out why. Letters from Our Readers BOYCOTT OF GERMAN GOODS New York. Comrade Editor: As a Party member, I would like to be informed as to the official po- sition of the Communist Party on the boycott of all German-made goods. Should we, as Communists, encourage it, or refrain from partici- Pating in it? r FD. Intense Work Carrying Out the Open Letter ‘Communists Must Carry Out During Strike |Planned Recruiting Is Member in Trade Unio | By J. | But some comrades ask how? We j have had in the struggles that have in the very forefront of the fight, who have gained the prestige and confidence of the workers. A Party comrade who militantly fights with the workers in their strike has in most cases no reason to hide or deny that’ he is a Communist. Who could better convince the workers about the Communist’ Party, than just this Communist, who fights together with them. And when is’ there a better | time to build our Party, than’ during the struggie, when tl workers show the no: tty work- ers through their self-sacrificing, un- tiring activity that they are not a secret “red spectre” as the bosses and refomists waat the workers to be- lieve, but railitant fighters in the de+ Communist | fense of the workers interests. This is the time when we can show the workers best, that we are part and parcel, flesh and bleod of the work- ing class. If we would consciously build around these comrades groups of non-Party actives, at the same time winning them for the Party, the tempo of recruitment would increase a huadredfold. No one can deny that our Party comrades, our fractions in the indus- trial unicns, in the A. F. of L. and independent unions are working hard during strikes. The Party is in the forefront of many of these struggles. But our fractions are not carrying on real planned work to win the most active strikers, the best of the union members into our Party. To recruit members from the factories or from the unions is not an easy task. The Party fractions and shop nuclei have to work systematically, selecting the best fighters, the most promising workers, and patiently, persistently develop them politically and win them for the Party. Sometimes we have to spend many days before we con- vince the worker that his place is in the Communist Party. We shall not have the illusion that radicalization of the masses means that they are all ready at once to join the Commu- nist Party, that only a general leaflet or a mass meeting is needed to bring them to our ranks. What is im- portant above all, in addition to im~- proving our political mass education of the workers, is this personal at- tention to individual workers, this planned recruiting of the new forces that are being brought forward as a | taken place, comrades who have been) a Pask for Every Party ns and in All Struggles PETER. It. result of the struggles. Unless this becomes an integral part of our work in the unions, then we cannot cone ceive that our Party will march fore ward at a more rapid pace than here tofore. Recruit Into Our Ranks Our systematic planned recruiting in tite factories and unions will de velop more rapidly if we simultane. ously strengthen and improve our mass agitation and propaganda. The workers should see the Communist Party, every day, everywhere. The Party must explain all political events in leaflets, shop papers, meetings, through the Daily Worker. And in all of the activities in the shops; in the unions, among the unemployed and: other mass organizations, we should recruit for the Party. No dis- trict, section committee, unit or frac- tion meeting should conclude without taking up correctly the problem of ‘rectuiting. The Party must be there where the masses are working, -liv- ing, suffering and fighting, if we want to win over the majority ofthe proletariat. And in these places—we haye to recruit the best, most class conscious, most active, most cour- ageous workers into our ranks. f Never before was the connettion of the government with the bosses of the factories so evident as how. There is no economic struggle or strike where the N.R.A. does not play a strike-breaking role; where the city, state and federal administration does not directly intervene against the workers, hrough arbitration and with the-aid of the city and state police, or national In such a sit- uation the Party and every single member of the Party has the revo- lutionary duty to bring to the work- ers on the basis of their practical ex- Periences the role of the capitalist state, the essence of bourgeois dem- ocracy, the betraying role of the so- clal-fascists on the one hand and the revolutionary role of the Com- munist Party on the other, The Open Letter has stated that “never before was the situation in the country so favorable for the development of the Communist Party into a real revolutionary mass Party.” This must be understood by every Patty member. This should permeate the ranks of every Party unit. And with confidence and boldness we should not hesitate to bring into our ranks thousands of new workers. By PAUL LUTTINGER, M.D. ANSWERS TO QUESTIONS Wants to Adopt Child L. T., Brooklyn:—As you rightly observe, such a matter is not strictly within our province. Nevertheless, we happen to know of some children who could be adopted. Nearly all of them, however, have certain res- trictions. Have you any preference as to age, sex, race? Again, do you expect to adopt the child legally? And if not, are you prepared to have the parent (there is usually one vis- ible) takew the child back when economic conditions permit it, after you have lavished your love and money on the child for years? Fur- thermore, do you want the mother to know you or do you wish to remain incognito (unknown)? Finally, a cer- tain investigation is necessary under all circumstances, just as the child permit us to visit your home? We mention all these opstacles be- cause the adoption of a child is a serious undertaking, not to be en- tered into without prolonged reflec- tions. Many cases we know have out to be tragic for all con- proud of the achievement of the Now what? I say build the Party they cant, then they are not fit to lead a Bolshevik Party, even though it does hurt some people's feelings. Forward to a mass Party. We poet of Pennsylvania will do our M. 8. “Interested,” New York.—Since you do not give us your name and ‘ad- dress, we cannot help you in finding out what delayed your application. original quota of $10 by sending in = G. Estrin a Russ. Mut. Aid 4.11 11. re do for y | =. Wilinsky 10] Blumen, List wees oer ne VAY oe 25) 109599 / * L. Ketcher .05| Jacobs 10 A. Snider +10; Rogers 10 4 LN. :05| Gardamen 25 Bahan eee —— $404.75) i Minter 10] Reichberg 35 reviously recorded _._ 5,773.06 S. Freed ae J. Rahus 8 : L. Parson -25| Braverman 50 Total to date “10| A. Joseph 15 DISTRICT No. 1 , H. Green E Leo Shave 28 H. 8. Taylor, An- Laundry x H. Fesnoft 25 son, Me, .00| E. Dears (25) List ‘1 P. Silvits 25 V. Semenuk, List L. Bischer .25| B. Rogoff 10) List s2ses— 38600, Salem— Prog. Pur Workers | R. Nadoff :25| M. Friedman 25 V. Semenuk 1.00] List 53920— +10] Weston 35 Friend 1.00] A. De. Luks 125] A. Kravits 110 . Eeipern = 1.00| “V. Arriconth -10| J. Blumen 310 Dobrowskt 50] Stain <5] M. Greenberg 10 Dzradyk :25| Shapiro -35| M. Madlin "25 ©. P. Unit, Con- Ginsberg cord, N. H. — 1.00] Liebowlts Total to date 276.73| D. Flatant DISTRICT Ne. 2 | Golob M. Levine 50) Zi Kaplan and Got- Winkler Ub .20| Cornell Li Comrade Louis 125] A. Mikolayunes .60 Mrs. MeCormack 6.00 Mironchick 64 Group Montefiore ‘Mittelpukt J Patients Sec. 1, Unit 14 1° Goldens Bridge Unit 17 1.00 Colony 00 Unit 1 3.00 3. Waitamen 5.00] Sec. 6, Unit 22.28 Astoria, Anon , 1.00| List 53958— D. Levinson 50| E. Hoetzer 10 : D. Friedman 1.00] V. Raggio «10| Total to’ date 531.16 Krosich, Red A. Coca» :10| DISTRICT No, 7 Builder 2,33} I. Karbis :08| Contributors not re- Unity Camp _—§.00| Sec. 6, Unit 6, ported: Class, Public List, 54096— Pol. Chamber Speaking 1.35] E, Smith +10] Labor 1.28 Nat. LL.D. 37.50) P. Kaplan :25| J. Reed Club—A. Workers L. Cohen G. Glanz ‘B. Magil C Dress Shop 6.00] _L. Rifkin Greek Wrkrs Educ. 20 Russ. Mut, Aid See. 10 League Sus.Fed.— 115! Br. 62 2.00] Sec. 1, Lists S. Lafas 10] J. Bindok 15 L. Emery LL.D, Sec. 1, Don. A. Barris 10] ©. Karl Bt Affair 2.10| Seq 1, Sus. Fa. A. Price 10] Ingraham, Unit 5 5.80 J. L. Engdahl LL.D, J. Seskollaris “10 sd List 1572— Total to date 3,030.00] A. Alexandopulos .25| Total to date 161.28 G. Brachman .§0|_ DISTRICT No. 3 | P. Popadopulos .25| DISTRICT No. 17 8. Rubin (25| Unem. Councils 7.50] P. Prappas 25] Picnic, Kaplan 125 | Rurkovsky 9.00] G. Mitrousias , .10 10.50 Gottlieb ‘50 | Miller -70| PB. Mikalow 10 — List 15713— T. Dipietere XK. Kollantzis -10] Total to date 22.00 J. Kaplan .80| A. Ricet -10| DISTRICT No. 19 D. Goldner -15| B. DiGermanio 25] :fovie Showings, ubengtein 25] A. Elenoro 15] Denver 17.00 Leis (25| L. Gionocolo Chrousakis :25] *fovle Showing, Ae 125] L. Terte .25] Rock Springs | 10.00 8. Yanow :50| A. Mardy 10 — Reppen ‘10| B. Battarino +10] Total to date 98.98 List 15700—~ 3 15 1. W. 0. J. Gurman 10} B. 35) Br. 0, N. ¥., 8. Garsky sto] B. +10) ist ‘5476— D. Woolts 110] Bernstein 2.50 05 M. Seder 10/.T. Goldstein 1.50] P. 06 R. Raveht 10) H. Isriait 1.50] A. Edwards = .03 ©. Bronstein .10| F. Bagelman 1.05], James 05 List 15696— Sam 10.10} Morgenstein 10 L.-Lieberman 10] J. Mistoft ‘Unit 11 3.60} Dorothy 02 G. Abraham 03} J. Neuman Unit 12 1.05) 'B. Feig 35 L. Sorkin 10) B. Lane Unit 15 5.05) J. Reed Br. 134 6.25 J. Strauch 110] M. Shein Unit 4, Br, 50, Newark 5.00 R. Strauch 10| H. BE. Howell 7.35] Br. 38, Ne 5.00 P. Cohen 1051. Papes + 1.05 —— Tdet 18716— 4%, Simino —— Totel to dete 303.11 There are various reasons » think this matter over most critical moment, However, as you seem to be a determined young lady and you have reached the dangerous thirties, the step is to make sure that your boy friend is capable of the strategy, tactics, Jomacy and feminine wiles to be em-' hmale to submit to a medical exam-, ination which might disclose an im- paired virility. Sauerkraut Juice hy ay cations "are sometimes eget other you ve fi been ployed in order to induce a reluctant discuss ple have had the same results—when they drink the real juice. Strange as a it may seem, the sauerkraut can- ned by the large canneries is more likely to be the genuine article than the one sbld privately on stands. This is probably due to the fact that. the canned product is distri- buted through interstate shipment and, hence, comes under the Federal Pure’ Food Law. You need ‘not feel any ill effects from the daily use of sauerkraut juice. A certain great-grand father of our acquaintance, imbibed it for eighty years, and became a father at the age of 82; but those were the ° days before electric refrigeration, if you get our point, ” wet diet was blind," ‘al- it is i do Editor. We write daily y health problems of all Tore ahve Part - hye specific | We could only mention a, few points .Which affect Party workers more par- ppoulas , leaving the ills they share in. common with other workers for future discussion. , Temember that we corisider the interests of the large proletarian adership filled the space of only

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